Abstract

Microinsurance is promoted as a valuable instrument for low-income households to buffer financial losses due to health or climate-related risks. However, apart from direct positive effects, such formal insurance schemes can have unintended side effects when insured households lower their contribution to traditional informal arrangements where risk is shared through private monetary support. Using a stylized agent-based model, we assess impacts of microinsurance on the resilience of those smallholders in a social network who cannot afford this financial instrument. We explicitly include the decision behavior regarding informal transfers. We find that the introduction of formal insurance can have negative side effects even if insured households are willing to contribute to informal risk arrangements. However, when many households are simultaneously affected by a shock, e.g. by droughts or floods, formal insurance is a valuable addition to informal risk-sharing. By explicitly taking into account long-term effects of short-term transfer decisions, our study allows to complement existing empirical research. The model results underline that new insurance programs have to be developed in close alignment with established risk-coping instruments. Only then can they be effective without weakening functioning aspects of informal risk management, which could lead to increased poverty.

Highlights

  • Our analysis covers different risk-coping scenarios depending on the availability of insurance and informal transfers and the transfer decision of insured households

  • Introducing formal insurance in communities with functioning informal risk-sharing arrangements can have a crucial impact on household welfare, especially for those who do not have access to formal insurance

  • Our simulation results show that when insured households become unwilling to help households without insurance and withdraw their contribution to informal transfers, this largely reduces the ability of households without access to insurance to cope with income losses

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to assess potential long-term consequences of introducing such formal insurance schemes to communities in which informal risk-sharing arrangements between smallholder farmers are prevalent

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